McQuaid calls on Armstrong to help fight doping
UCI Pr🌺esident again refuses to accept blame for c🐓ycling's doping problems



UCI President Pat McQuaid 🔥has called on Lance Armstrong to "jump on his private plane and come to Switzerland and say 'what can I do?'," to help the overcome the doping problems that have caused so much🔥 damage to the sport.
Speaking in St Petersburg, Russia, after being elected to serve a second four-year term on the Association of Summer Olympic Interna🅷tional Federations (ASOIF) Council, McQuaid again refuted the idea that he should resign or ev🔯en apologise for the UCI's failure to catch Armstrong and other dopers.
"I would like to see him jump on his private plane and come to Switzerland (UCI headquarters) and say 'what can I do?'," Reuters reported McQuaid as saying.
"He has not apologize🦋d to the sport of cycling. Everyone accepts he has not come clean. If he has info🧸rmation that is valuable to the sport he has to come forward."
"He sh꧅ould sit down and work with us ... with USADA and the wo🔯rld Anti-doping Agency (WADA)."
McQuaid said that Armstrong had no place in cycling when USADA banned the Texan for life. Armstrong reacted angrily to that statement in an 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:exclusive interview with Cyclingnews, saying: "Pat is just in a constant 🍬ജCYA (Cover Your Ass) mode. Pathetic."
No mea culpa
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McQuaid is standing for re-election as UCI President this year. He is already on the campaign trail and is working hard to justify his and the UCI's track record in the fight against doping. Despite a stream of 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:accusations that the UCI could have and should have done more when the use of EPO was rampant in the peloton, McQuaid refuses to perform any form of ꦉmea culpa.
꧋"I do 🌊not think the UCI made mistakes," McQuaid claimed.
"The statistics show the 🔯UCI was the most advanced in th😼e fight against doping."
McQuaid became UCI president in 2005, the year of Armstrong's last Tour de Franceꦡ victory and c🎃ontinued many of the policies and ideals of his predecessor Hein Verbruggen.
"I was fooled. I believed there was no way a man so close🍎 to death would go and start putting stuff into his body that could be dangerous," McQuaid said.
"My experien💟ces as a cyclist convinced me he was real."
"There were no tests available for the products. Ten or 15 years ago the ar🌌moury (against d🐠oping) was weaker. The doping system was weak."
No resignation
Many have called for McQuaid to resign but he refuses to go, insisting he wants to e🍨radicate doping.
"I firmly believe I am making a difference. I want to eradicate doping. I want to see this thing through. I want🥀 to finish what I started," he said𝓡,
"T♋here is a change in the peloton. Every little thing I am bringing i🎃n is making a difference."
McQuaid claimed that professional cycling will recover from arguably thജe biggest doping scandal in the history of the sport.
"We will go beꦦyond it. Cycling has got new champions and🗹 it is getting global. It is growing dramatically. I am very positive about cycling and the future," he said.
"Africa, for example has h💯uge potential. It may not have a commercial potential but it has damned good athletes. There will be a black African athlete on the podium of a major tour within six years."